ch4ppt integument
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Used with permission from Pearson for Clay Virtual Academy. Copyright Pearson, Inc.TRANSCRIPT
PowerPoint® Lecture Slide Presentation by Patty Bostwick-Taylor, Florence-Darlington Technical College
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4
Skin and Body Membranes
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Integumentary System
Skin (cutaneous membrane)
Skin derivatives
Sweat glands
Oil glands
Hair
Nails
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Skin Functions
Table 4.1 (1 of 2)
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Skin Functions
Table 4.1 (2 of 2)
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Skin Structure
Epidermis—outer layer
Stratified squamous epithelium
Often keratinized (hardened by keratin)
Dermis
Dense connective tissue
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Skin Structure
Figure 4.3
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Skin Structure
Subcutaneous tissue (hypodermis) is deep to dermis
Not part of the skin
Anchors skin to underlying organs
Composed mostly of adipose tissue
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Normal Skin Color Determinants
Melanin
Yellow, brown, or black pigments
Carotene
Orange-yellow pigment from some vegetables
Hemoglobin
Red coloring from blood cells in dermal capillaries
Oxygen content determines the extent of red coloring
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Skin Appendages
Cutaneous glands are all exocrine glands
Sebaceous glands (oil glands)
Sweat glands
Hair
Arrector Pili Muscle (attaches to hair)
Nails
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Skin Structure
Figure 4.4
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Appendages of the Skin
Figure 4.9
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Skin Homeostatic Imbalances
Infections and allergies
Contact dermatitis
Exposures cause allergic reaction
Impetigo
Caused by bacterial infection
Psoriasis
Cause is unknown
Triggered by trauma, infection, stress
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Skin Homeostatic Imbalances
Figure 4.10
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Skin Homeostatic Imbalances
Burns
Tissue damage and cell death caused by heat, electricity, UV radiation, or chemicals
Associated dangers
Dehydration
Infection
Circulatory shock
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Severity of Burns
First-degree burns
Only epidermis is damaged
Skin is red and swollen
Second-degree burns
Epidermis and upper dermis are damaged
Skin is red with blisters
Third-degree burns
Destroys entire skin layer
Burn is gray-white or black
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Severity of Burns
Figure 4.11b
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Critical Burns
Burns are considered critical if
Over 25% of body has second-degree burns
Over 10% of the body has third-degree burns
There are third-degree burns of the face, hands, or feet
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Skin Cancer
Cancer—abnormal cell mass
Classified two ways
Benign
Does not spread (encapsulated)
Malignant
Metastasized (moves) to other parts of the body
Skin cancer is the most common type of cancer
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Skin Cancer Types
Basal cell carcinoma
Least malignant
Most common type
Arises from stratum basale
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Skin Cancer Types
Figure 4.12a
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Skin Cancer Types
Squamous cell carcinoma
Metastasizes to lymph nodes if not removed
Early removal allows a good chance of cure
Believed to be sun-induced
Arises from stratum spinosum
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Skin Cancer Types
Figure 4.12b
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Skin Cancer Types
Malignant melanoma
Most deadly of skin cancers
Cancer of melanocytes
Metastasizes rapidly to lymph and blood vessels
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Skin Cancer Types
Figure 4.12c